Sponsored by the Sacramento Public Library, nine book clubs are starting this summer and aim to give women a stronger foothold on their finances, especially in this still-shaky economy. Held at various library branches around the country, each of the financial book clubs is led by local women – from stay-at-home moms to business owners – who attended the library’s “Smart Investing for Women” lunchtime speaker series last year. Each volunteer chose her book from among 50 financial titles recommended by the Sacramento Public Library’s business librarian. Read more.
Archive for the ‘Education’ Category
Daughters & Role Models
In Education, Girls, Media & Technology on June 27, 2010 at 8:48 pmA recent Boston.com blog called In the Parenthood offered ten tips for parents for talking to their daughters about the importance of role models, media literacy and self confidence.
10 Lessons for Daughters from The Council of Dads
In Education, Girls, Leadership on June 21, 2010 at 9:21 amBruce Feller recently published a book called The Council of Dads, which gathers the life lessons from dads and various father figures in the author’s life. In a recent Huffington Post article he offered up ten llife lessons for girls, including:
- Be a Traveler, Not a Tourist
- Always Pack Your Flip-Flops
- Use Your Words
As we celebrate Father’s Day, what advice do dads have for daughters?
Title IX Helps Girls Get Jobs
In Education, Girls, Leadership on June 14, 2010 at 7:51 amIn her paper Beyond the Classroom: Using Title IX to Measure the Return to High School Sports, Wharton business and public policy professor Betsey Stevenson offers evidence that playing sports leads to more education and better employment opportunities. Her paper focuses on Title IX of the 1972 Education Amendments to the 1964 Civil Rights Act, which expanded high school athletic opportunities for girls. Her research compares the variation in outcomes across states for girls who went to school before Title IX and after, and concludes that playing sports paid off.
According to Stevenson, the skills associated with athletic participation and success later in life “may include the ability to communicate, the ability to work well with others, competitiveness, assertiveness and discipline.” Read more.
Women Entrepreneurs in Science & Technology Honored
In Education, Leadership, Media & Technology on June 14, 2010 at 7:45 amFour female industry leaders have been honored by the non-profit networking organization Women Entrepreneurs in Science and Technology (WEST). WEST honored four female entrepreneurs who have either started their own companies or contributed to a larger company’s success. The four recipients were Mara Aspinall, president and CEO of On-Q-ity Inc.; Katrine Bosley, CEO of Avila Therapeutics; Nancy Briefs, president of Elemé Medical Inc.; and Sue Welch, TradeStone Software’s founder and CEO. Read more.
Carnegie Science Center Wins Grant Aimed at Engaging Girls with Science & Technology
In Education, Girls, Media & Technology, Uncategorized on May 18, 2010 at 9:40 amThe Carnegie Science Center has won $200,000 in the MacArthur Digital Media and Learning Competition for a new project designed to get more girls engaged in science and gaming technology.
The project, Click!Online, will be a Web-based game for girls featuring a fictional “spy school” called the Click! Agency. Through the agency, girls will network to solve mysteries in biomedical science, environmental protection and expressive technology. Meanwhile, online “senior agents” will mentor the players, emphasizing critical thinking, problem solving, group sourcing and social action to solve real-world challenges. Spy girls can share results with each other around the world.
The Science Center’s award was one of 10 announced Monday, chosen from a pool of 800 applicants from 32 countries. They will share $1.7 million to use on games, mobile phone applications, virtual worlds and social networks.
Dream it. Design it. Build it.
In Conferences, Education, Media & Technology, Uncategorized on May 17, 2010 at 8:11 amOn Saturday, May 22, 2010 D.C. FIRST Robotics – Washington DC-Area in partnership with Archbishop Carroll High School and DCRobotics presents Scratch Day!
Scratch is open source animation software from MIT great for age 7 (or early readers) through adult. It is a free computer programming resource that makes it easy to create your own interactive stories, animations, games, music, and art — and share your creations on the web. At this event, everyone is welcome to try out Scratch and learn about the on-line exchange. You can join Scratch enthusiasts in the Washington DC-area to meet and learn from each other! All interested students, parents and teachers are invited.
More information is available at www.dc-first.org.
Calling all girls! Join a day of math, science fun
In Conferences, Education, Girls, Uncategorized on May 12, 2010 at 9:11 amThe 5th annual Expanding Your Horizons Math and Science Conference is Saturday May 22 at the Cooperative Middle School in Stratham, NH.
The conference is organized by the Exeter Area General Federation of Women’s Club, the Greater Seacoast Girls Initiative and sponsored by local businesses. This is a great opportunity for girls to be exposed to the math, science and technology careers in a fun, hands-on experience with friends. This free, all-day workshop, is open to any girl in Grades 6 to 8. Because of the success achieved in the past four years, spaces available for the girls is up to 180.
Registration deadline is Friday, May 14! Don’t delay!
White House to Host Math & Science Fair
In Education, Girls, Government, Media & Technology, Uncategorized on May 5, 2010 at 6:59 amFirst Lady Michelle Obama said the White House is going to host its first ever Science Fair–doing for math and science stars what the White House does for the NCAA champs. While attending the National Science Bowl on Monday, Mrs. Obama said that the science fair would include students from all over the country, mentioning that she and President Obama think that “budding inventors, scientists and mathematicians should be at the White House, too.”
Among the First Lady’s goals are to cultivate more hands-on learning opportunities for students by modernizing science labs and supporting project-based learning, and expanding advanced courses in schools throughout the country.
Mrs. Obama continued by saying:
We want to create more opportunities for under-represented groups as well, particularly women and girls. We want them to have the confidence . We want all our young women to have the confidence and the support to take on the study and to succeed in the study of science, math, engineering and technology.
A date for the White House math and science fair has not been announced.
Don’t Compromise Your Best Qualities
In Education, Girls, Leadership, Uncategorized on April 28, 2010 at 3:46 pmIn her new book, Iron Butterflies: Women Transforming Themselves and the World, developmental psychologist Birute Regine investigates and explains how women often contort themselves to make it in a man’s world.
Ms. Regine documents how, at a certain point in their lives and often out of necessity, successful women bring traits and values traditionally associated with women to their callings and into the marketplace. Yet Regine is confident that a revolution in underway. A recent in article in the Huffington Post explained further, saying:
In a complex environment and an interconnected world, skills associated with women will prove more and more effective and keenly pertinent: their holistic view of the world, their ability to see interconnections among things, their relational intelligence, their tendencies toward collaboration and inclusion, their ability to empathize.”
Referred to as Iron Butterflies, the term captures “their individual resilience and fragility, conviction and poignancy, their inner beauty and outer strength.” Russ Welon of the Huffington Post encourages that Iron Butterflies become “essential reading for young women who often fail to appreciate just how hard-won are the opportunities they enjoy today.”
The book provides insights into the lives of 60 successful women, including businesswomen, CEOs, a Congresswoman, a governor, an ex-prime minister, a Pulitzer Prize-winning novelist, a winemaker, artists, doctors, and nurses. The women discuss their insecurities and struggles.